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AFTER 

TWENTY-FIVE 

YEARS 

REUNION BOOK 

OF THE CLASS OF 1881 

PRINCETON 




ILLUSTRATED 



NEW YORK 

PRINTED FOR THE CLASS 

1906 



L j-A H^ Q 

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^\)t (attottj K^rmtirnj Company 



CONTENTS 

The Class Reunion at Princeton i 

The Assembling 3 

The Parade to the Game 4 

Hudnut's Luncheon 5 

On the Campus 6 

Afternoon Tea at Duffield's 7 

The Class Meeting 8 

The Dinner at the Inn 12 

After Events 20 

Class News 23 

Class Miscellanies 43 

Organization 45 

Marriages 47 

^'' Births 4^ 

V^ Deaths . . . ._ 50 

"^^ Revised Directory 51 



cy 



^^ 






ILLUSTRATIONS 



FULL-PAGE 



FACING 
PAGE 



The Class of '8l After Twenty- Five Years, Frontispiece 
Taken on the Parade to the Yale Game. 

Another '8i Class Group 12 

Taken at Ivy Hall, opposite Headquarters. 

^' As Freshmen First We Came to College . . 28 
f^ol de rol, de rol, rol, rol ! " 

Princeton's Next New Dormitory , 44 

Ot which '81 is to build a Section. 

IN TEXT 

PAGE 

"Here 's Looking at You" 37 

Townsend L'sing the Townsend Patent Hand-Level. 



AFTER 

TWENTY-FIVE 

YEARS 



AFTER TWENTY-FIVE 
YEARS 

THE '8i CLASS REUNION 
AT PRINCETON, 

June 8-13, 1906 



By the Secretary 
t: D W I N A . D I X 

The Twenty-fitth Anniversary Reunion was a 
"tremenjous" success. The Class's former reunions 
have been, like George Washington, good and great, 
but this one was undoubtedly the best ever. Forty- 
four men, all told, were in attendance. Those who 
came had their reward. Those who could not come, 
we are sorry for. Those who could have come and 
did not, ought to be sorry for themselves, for they 
missed the particular time of their lives. 

The success of the reunion was due in part, of 
course, to the especial events and stunts of the oc- 

I 



AFTER TWENTY-FIVE YEARS 

casion ; but it was due still more to the remarkable 
evidences of warm feeling and closeness which the 
Class has of late years developed so markedly. 
There was more than friendliness and good-will in 
the meeting of the men one with another ; there was 
a real affection ; and it was confined to no group or 
set, but manifested itself as a general and splendid 
exhibition of Class spirit and comradeship. One of 
the men writes, in a subsequent note to the Secre- 
tary : " I expected to find good-fellowship at the 
Class Reunion, but the fact exceeded my expecta- 
tions, — the boys are just like a big family. What 
touched me past expression was the atmosphere of 
loving-kindness. It seemed as if everybody was 
trying to say the kindest things possible. Never 
was there, I think, anything like it in the world. To 
me, coming back for the first time in fifteen years, 
the charm of it all was very great." 

The Class's thanks for the excellent arrangements 
made for the Reunion are whollv due to Munn and 
Hudnut, who for months preceding gave lavishly of 
both time and care in discussing and perfecting the 
plans. Dufiield and van Dyke, at the Princeton end 
of the line, ably seconded their efforts. The Class 
Headquarters was at No. 44 Mercer Street, just 
opposite the old Ivy Hall. The choice proved ad- 
mirable. The location was conveniently central, 
and the house itself, with its double parlors and 
adjacent dining-room, its shadv front porch, and 



THE '81 CLASS REUNION 

the little garden in front, was capitally adapted to 
reunion purposes. Bedrooms upstairs and in the 
Seminary Building near by were available for those 
of the fellows who desired them ; and breakfasts were 
served by Coles, the man in charge. A piano was 
provided, and modest liquid refreshments were ob- 
tainable (on payment) bv those who felt the need 
of hearing the ice clink against the sides of the 
glasses. 

The men began to drift toward Princeton on 
Friday, and on Saturdav morning there was a steady 
string of '81 men converging upon Headquarters 
with their suit-cases and the smiles that wouldn't 
come off. It was " Hello, Billy Roberts! " and 
" Here comes Joe Hubbard," and " How are you, 
Frank Gledhill ? " and similar ejaculations and gratu- 
lations, from mid-forenoon till it was time to form 
for the great pe-rade to the game at two o'clock. 
Brown, Cauldwell and Farr cut the exercises for 
a while to try one another out on a round at golt, 
but most of the men stayed about Headquarters. A 
general reminiscencing, a joshing and jollying, among 
men that hadn't met, some of them, for five or per- 
haps even tw^enty-five years, went on on that wide, 
shady porch all the morning; just the sort of thing 
that one comes for, quite as much as tor the formal 
class-meeting and the dinner and the like ; the sort 
of thing that was alone worth the time and trouble 
of getting to Princeton; the sort of thing that you 

3 



AFTER TWENTY-FIVE YEARS 

fellows who did not get to the reunion shouldn't 
have missed for anything, and certainly mustn't 
miss next time ! 

The pe-rade was a most imposing aftair. The men 
were simply but strikingly decorated with orange- 
and-black hat-bands, and with wide orange-and-black 
sashes, worn diagonally over one shoulder and under 
the other arm ; and all carried orange and-black-flags. 
The huge Class Banner was borne aloft by the two 
men in charge of Headquarters, and the Class was 
preceded by the Rittenhouse Military Band of twenty 
pieces, and followed by Pliny Fisk's big automobile 
with horn honking and flags waving. Thirty-eight 
men of the Class lined up for the procession. At the 
farther end of Dickinson a halt was made, and Rose 
took the excellent photograph in the frontispiece.'^ 
All along the line of march, as we passed groups of 
spectators, or other classes forming, cheers rang out 
for the Class of '8i. At least one wholly disinterested 
and impartial observer, known to the Sec- 

retary, pronounced '8i the finest body of men in the 
parade. The long column of classes made the usual 
inner circuit of the ball-grounds amid great enthu- 
siasm from the grand stand and bleachers, and then 
all took seats for the game. 

The game has become historic now, and needs no 

* Those desiring copies of this, or of the other Class photograph 
further on, can obtain them from R. H. Rose, Princeton, at $1.25 

per. 

4 



THE '81 CLASS REUNION 

description here. It was one of the closest games 
ever played by college nines, — absorbing in the 
strained intensity of the middle innings, and electri- 
fying in its unexpected and brilliant climax. No 
more dramatic baseball moment can be conceived 
than when, with Princeton's losing nine at the bat 
in the last half of the ninth inning, two men on bases 
and two men out, a clean, swift daisy-cutter was 
rapped forth which sent the two runners triumphantly 
home and won the game and the season's champion- 
ship for Princeton. Little wonder that the mem- 
bers of the nine ran for their lives to the clubhouse 
after the game, to save themselves from the jubilant 
mobbing of the uproarious field. 

On Saturday evening the Class foregathered at 
Headquarters, and yarned and smoked and sang till 
a shamelessly late hour. 

On Sunday, after the baccalaureate sermon (the 
attendance on which, on the part of '81, the Secre- 
tary declines to give out in figures), came one of the 
most enjoyable and successful affairs that the Class 
has ever attended, — the luncheon at Aleck Hud- 
nut's, in his charming new home at the end of Li- 
brarv Place, out bevond Paul van Dyke's. The 
members of the Class were greeted in the drawing- 
room by Mr. and Mrs. Hudnut and Miss Hudnut, 
Aleck's parents and sister. Then, proceeding to 
the dining-room, the men took places at a huge 
round table almost completely filling the main room 

5 



AFTER TWENTY-FIVE YEARS 

and elaborately decorated with flowers and flags in 
Princeton colors. Two overflow tables were in readi- 
ness for those whom the large table could not accom- 
modate. The following men sat down: Munn, Farr, 
and his son (the Class Boy), Sinclair, Dodd, Cauld- 
well, Wills, van Dyke, Van Alen, Butler, Vlymen, 
Kirk, Fowler, Jackson, Duffield, Arthur Scribner, 
Hubbard, Brown, T, D. Warren, Monroe, Fred. 
Davis, Rodgers, Dix and Hudnut. 

The luncheon was a real shef-do-over^ a tower-de- 
force^ a cul-de-sac^ an entente cordiale, and nobody 
skipped anything. While it was being negotiated, 
Aleck sprang a surprise on the Class in presenting 
each with one of his wonderful X-ray fluorescent 
tubes, by which any '8i man can hereafter divine the 
secrets of nature and the workings of his adversaries' 
minds with infallible accuracy. Those of the Class 
not present should write to learn the secret from 
those who were. After the luncheon was over, a 
good part of the afternoon was spent on the broad, 
breezy porch, — largely in commiserating those of 
the fellows who had not had the good luck to be in 
Princeton and attend. 

Monday proved another day of Class arrivals, sev- 
eral coming then who had not been able to come 
sooner. Many of the fellows spent a part of the 
morning out on the campus, which presented the 
familiar festive Commencement scene, with groups 
of undergraduates and pretty girls sitting about on 

6 



THE '81 CLASS REUNION 

the benches, marching classes, returning grads spy- 
ing out the land, and at noon a dense crowding 
around Old North's steps to see, if not hear, the Ivy 
Oration. Year by year the historic old campus im- 
proves in beauty, and new buildings rise here and 
there in the college grounds. A stately gateway 
now stands on Nassau Street directly in front of 
North, with a new path leading into the grounds, 
making what may be termed the formal entrance to 
the University precincts. Down by the fine new 
Gymnasium and east of Brokaw Field, work is well 
under way on the last new dormitory, Patton Hall, 
to an extension of which our Class is so liberally 
contributing, and which continues the beautiful Eng- 
lish University Gothic scheme begun with Blair and 
Little Halls and carried on with the Gymnasium 
itself. Over on McCosh Walk is rising a handsome 
new lecture and recitation building, fitly named Mc- 
Cosh Hall. Beyond this is seen a striking building, 
of rich russet-colored stone and effective architectural 
lines, — the '79 Dormitory, built and presented to 
the college singly and unaided through the munifi- 
cence of the Class of '79. Everywhere about the 
campus and grounds are visible the signs of aca- 
demic progress and prosperity. 

At four o'clock on Monday afternoon the Class 
repaired in force to a tea at Henry Duffield's hos- 
pitable home, which is also on Library Place, a new 
and attractive street paralleling Bayard Lane, a little 

7 



AFTER TWENTY-FIVE YEARS 

farther out. The Class's wives and children were 
also invited, and Mrs. Butler, Mrs. Cauldwell, Mrs. 
Dix, Dunn's son, Mrs. and Miss Jackson, Mrs. 
Kirk, Mrs. Van Alen, Mrs. Voorhees and Mrs. 
Webb were among those welcomed by Mrs. Duf- 
field, and by Henry himself, now the Treasurer of 
Princeton University — likewise by Susan Cornelia 
Duffield, aged five, and Daniel Morrell Duffield, 
aged two and a half. 

The Class Meeting came off at Headquarters at 
half-past five on the same afternoon. Munn, Class 
President, called the meeting to order, and first briefly 
explained the proposition for a Class Memorial, to 
take the form of an individual section of the new 
dormitory, a continuation of Patton Hall, to be 
known as the Class of 1 8 8 1 Entry. This dormitory, 
which is to be built on the " Globe Wernicke" sys- 
tem of units, is capable of indefinite extension, it 
being thus possible for a large number ot classes to 
contribute to its erection. Munn stated that the 
project had been discussed and approved in an 
informal gathering of about twenty of the Class 
at a dinner given in New York in the spring by 
John Pitney, to whose initiative the plan was largely 
due. 1 1 7,500 was the minimum to be raised, but 
with 125,000 a more distinctive and striking section 
of the building could be put up. It was pointed 
out that a memorial gift of this kind is practically a 
direct addition to the endowment of the University, 



THE '81 CLASS REUNION 

while at the same time assuring the perpetuation ot 
the name of '81. 

It was moved by Cauldwell, and unanimously car- 
ried, that the project be ratified, and that the largest 
and best section possible be erected with the funds 
to be obtained. 

A modification of this resolution was suggested, 
to the effect that the expenses of the present reunion, 
and also a small reserve fund for future contingent 
Class expenses, reports, printing, postage, and the 
like, be charged against the memorial fund, or, in 
other words, that one fund should suffice for the 
whole. It was shown to be difficult, if not imprac- 
ticable, to run two separate funds, and double con- 
tributions would be by no means easy to levy. The 
interest alone on the proposed fund, accumulating 
within the year before it should be needed for build- 
ing purposes, would probably be adequate to cover all 
such reunion and contingent expenses, so that the 
memorial fund itself need not be appreciably lessened. 
On motion of van Dyke, the Class unanimously 
supported this suggestion, and authorized the of- 
ficers to so provide trom the fund. 

Hudnut, Treasurer of the Class, announced that 
subscriptions to the amount of $20,200 had already 
been made to the fund, which is to be due in July, 
1907. 

It was moved that a vote of thanks be tendered by 
the Class to Arthur Scribner for his liberality in con- 

9 



AFTER TWENTY-FIVE YEARS 

nection with the cost of printing the Class Record, 
" After Twenty Years," five years ago. The Presi- 
dent and Treasurer have at various times tried to ob- 
tain an accounting from him as to the sum still unre- 
paid to him by the Class, which, it is suspected, 
amounts to several hundred dollars ; but Scribner 
has put them off with the shameless assertion that 
he had mislaid or lost his memoranda of the mat- 
ter, and he finally ended by declining to accept re- 
imbursement at all. A hearty and appreciative vote 
of thanks was passed by acclamation. 

It was moved by Butler that '8i as a body ex- 
press the hope that at Commencement seasons the 
practice of having free liquid refreshments, now fol- 
lowed by many classes, will be abandoned ; and that 
a memorial expressing their strong disapproval of 
the excesses now occasionally to be witnessed be pre- 
pared by a committee of three to be appointed by 
the Chair, and transmitted to the Class Officers' As- 
sociation of the Alumni, which is interesting itself 
in this matter. The motion was carried, and Butler, 
Dix and Harlan were appointed as such committee.* 

The election of Class officers was next in order. 
The President, thanking the Class for the honor 
shown him in previous elections, announced that he 

* The committee subsequently prepared the following minute, 
which the Class Secretary has duly transmitted as directed : 

'• Resolved, by the Class of 1881 of Princeton University, on 
the occasion of its twenty-fifth graduation anniversary, that it views 

10 



THE '81 CLASS REUNION 

was not a candidate for reelection. The Class recog- 
nized his sincerity, but utterly scouted his wishes. 
It was moved by Ad. Rodgers that the Secretary be 
instructed to cast the vote of the Class for the entire 
present board of officers. The motion was numer- 
ously seconded. To save the Chair embarrass- 
ment, Rodgers proceeded to put the motion himself; 
and, drowning out Munn's protests, it was carried 
with a roar of acclamation. 

It was moved, seconded and carried that the Class 
approve and indorse the so-called Dix system of 
group reunions, devised by the Secretary, published 
in the Princeton Alumni Weekly, and subsequently 
under discussion in the Class Officers' Association 
and among the alumni, whereby groups of contigu- 
ous classes among the older graduates should hold 
their reunions at the same time ; that a minute of the 

with regret and disapprobation the practice, which has unfortunately 
become prevalent at manv reunion Headquarters, of free distribution 
of liquid refreshments during Commencement week ; 

" That it is the unanimous sentiment of the Class that the Alumni 
should use their earnest endeavors to obtain the cessation of a custom 
prejudicial to the best interests of the University, and to that end 
that the committee appointed bring these resolutions to the attention 
ot the Class Officers' Association and take such other measures as may 
be proper to carrv them into effect." 

[Signed,] Charles Henry Butler, 
Edwin A. Dix, 
Richard D. Harlan, 

Committee. 
II 



AFTER TWENTY-FIVE YEARS 

Class's approval of the system be sent to the Class 
Officers' Association ; and that if said system should 
be put into effect, the next reunion of the Class be 
held under that schedule ; and otherwise that the 
next reunion and Class meeting be held in Princeton 
five years hence. 

The meeting then, on motion, adjourned. 

Rose came along with his big camera soon after- 
ward, and another fine Class picture, reproduced 
opposite, was taken on the steps of Ivy Hall, across 
the street from Headquarters. 

The hour fixed for the Class Dinner at the Prince- 
ton Inn was half-past seven, but it was eight o'clock 
before the men sat down. Here is the table-full: 





Arms 
Fowl 
A. S 
Dodd 

Mun 


Dix 

Fisk 
Farr 
Farr 


Hudnut 










Wills 










W. Roberts 


Moore 


Monroe 


Jackson 




W. A. Robinson 


Blydenburgh 




Brown 




Hubbard 


Voorhees 




F. Davis 




Cauldwell 
Rodgers 


Van Alen 
Dunn 




Kirk 




Titsworth 


Kimball 




Sinclair 




Manierre 


Brant 





Duffield 

Van Dyke 

Harlan 

Butler 

Cory 

Schmidt 

Robbins 

T. Warren 

McMurdy 



12 



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THE '81 CLASS REUNION 

Here is a list of the things we ate, drank and 
smoked : 

MENU 

Canape au Caviar 
Little Neck Clams on Half Shell 



Cream of Chicken 
Olives 



Soups 

Consomme, Julienne 
'Radishes Celery 



Lauhenheiiner 

Fish 

Boiled Salmon, Hollandaise 

Potatoes Persillade 

Entree 

Tenderloin of Beef, Bearnaise 

Stuffed Tomatoes 

Roast 
Philadelphia Squab au Cresson 
Salad 
Romaine and Tomato 
Cigarettes 
Dessert 



Fancy Ice Cream 



Princeton Inn, 
June 1 1, 1906. 



Assorted Cakes 



Coffee 

Cigars 

13 



AFTER TWENTY-FIVE YEARS 

After the repast (which was excellent) had been 
sufficiently toyed with, Munn got up and made a 
few genial remarks of greeting to the Class, par- 
ticularly welcoming those who had come long dis- 
tances, as from California and Italy and far-oft Asia 
Minor, wholly or largely to be present at the re- 
union. The Class loyally applauded this sentiment. 
To show that we were not forgotten by others also 
distant, who were unable to come, he read out the 
following cable-telegram from Carlsbad in Austria : 

"Via French, June li, 1906. 

"To Munn, Care Duffield, Princeton : 

" Contrratulations on Yale victories, health and best 

wishes to classmates, deeply regret absence. 

" Pitney." 

The Class gave three cheers for Pitney. 

Dix, who was next called upon, had another tele- 
gram to read out. It was from Wien, which being 
interpreted is Vienna, and ran as follows : 

"Govt., Via Azores, June 11, 1906. 
" To Class Eighty-One, Princeton, N. J. : 
" Hoch der Ein und Achtzig, yah, yah ! 

" Landon." 

The Class gave three cheers for Landon. 

The Secretary then read a number of extracts 
from letters from Thorn, who had hoped to be pres- 
ent, but had been prevented at the last. The ex- 

14 



THE 81 CLASS REUNION 

tracts consisted ot notes and information about 
various '8 i men whom Thom has run across recent- 
ly,- — Walsh, Vanderburgh, McCune, Allen, Skin- 
ner, etc. These items will be found among the 
Class notes and new^s, further on. Thom's final 
communication, sent to arrive for the reunion itselt, 
revealed a pencil picture of a scholarly looking gent, 
seated before a bottle of Scotch and a siphon, with 
this legend : 

" Here's to '81 ! 

"Small jov in Chicago, June iith, but I'm with vou in 
spirit, if not in anything more tangible. 

" To the best Class of the best College. Prosit ! 

"H. C. Thom." 

Whereupon the Class gave three cheers tor 
Walsh, Vanderburgh, McCune, Allen, Skinner and 
Thom collectively. 

Music was next in order and the Class sang with 
fervor " The Good Old College Time," written by 
the Secretary for a previous Class occasion and now 
found in the Carmina Prince tonia. 

The President next called on one from w^hom 
we were all heartily interested to hear, — Billy Dodd, 
who is home from his hospital work in Cesarea on 
a year's furlough, and who found himself one of the 
stars of the reunion. He gave some account ot his 
life among the unspeakable Turks, of the general 
social and political conditions prevailing in the 

15 



AFTER TWENTY-FIVE YEARS 

region, and of the encouragements as well as the 
difficulties of his work. He told a number of 
anecdotes illustrating the hardships and injustice 
often suffered by the natives, the influence of this 
medical mission, and the like. 

The Class gave three cheers for Dodd. 

" While We Are Marching Through Princeton " 
was next sung with a will. 

Allusion was then made to the fact the Class Boy, 
who is now a senior, was present at the dinner, and 
that his father had provided a loving-cup, filled 
with pleasant cheer, from which to drink the young 
man's health. The cup thereupon was sent the 
round of the table, and young Farr, being called 
upon, rose and responded gracefully to the good 
wishes expressed by the Class. He was followed by 
old Farr (this sounds both premature and disre- 
spectful, but there appears no practicable way of 
otherwise differentiating the two), who alluded to 
voung Farr's satisfactory progress in college, and 
thanked the Class for the interest they had always 
manifested in his (young Farr's, not old F'arr's,) 
welfare. The Class rejoined with three cheers for 
both Farrs, and sang " Old Nassau." 

Blydenburgh, being next summoned to the dais, 
read the following poem, which he had written for 
the occasion : 

Time may speed and the times may drive, 
And the roll of the years be twenty-five, 
i6 



THE '8i CLASS REUNION 

But the olden charm 's in the breath we draw, 
Under the spell of Old Nassau. 

Go, seal your hearts and hide away 

Their secrets in the busy day ; 

Our fellowship unlocks them all. 

Beneath the elms of Nassau Hall ; 

For youth is here, and youth will know 

The immortal hearts of long ago. 

While here and there we know a comrade passed, — 

Those shining presences which lighted days 

Rich in a thousand memories, — the Class 

Holds in its golden chain beneath the stars 

The loyal brothers of our Eighty-One. 

Have you had quiet guard, O sentinel ? 
Challenge to challenge round the fortress flies, — 

" All's well ! 

" Still in their citadel, 
" Our old ideals are safe against surprise." 

The Class gave three cheers for Blydenburgh, 
and Harlan sang a solo, " Some Dear Old Good 
Fellows I Know," the dear old good fellows coming 
in on the chorus. 

Dunn and Wills each made an impromptu but 
capital speech, commingled of humor and earnest- 
ness, and each was roundly applauded. Harlan told 
ot his machinations in arranging to have the Com- 
mencement dates at Lake Forest College, of which 
he is President, changed in such a way as not to 

17 



AFTER TWENTY-FIVE YEARS 

conflict with his reunion dates for Princeton ; and 
Tommy Warren, in the course of a brief but bril- 
liant speech which convulsed the house, explained 
that at Mohawk he had not machinated to change 
any specific dates, but had simply stopped the entire 
political, commercial and social machinery of the 
place for the time being in order to permit of his 
absence. 

The Class gave three cheers each for Dunn, Wills, 
Harlan and Warren. 

The evening was waning, and at Munn's sugges- 
tion the men now grouped around the piano to sing 
a new song, written for the reunion. It was entitled : 

"THE CLASS OF EIGHTY-ONE." 

Air : " Mr. Dooley " 
Words by the Class Secretary 

I 

When first we came to Princeton, nine and twenty years ago, 
There was a bunch of Seniors that monopolized the show. 
They looked with scorn on every other undergraduate; 
They were the one and only Class, — the Class of Seventy- 
Eight. 

But soon the scorning was changed to mourning ; 

They realized their course was nearly run. 
They were not in it, not for a minute, 

Not in it with the Class of Eighty-One. 

i8 



THE 81 CLASS REUNION 

2 

The Junior Class was suffering from cranial excess; 
They plainly felt that thev were It, and nothing more nor 

less. 
On all this rolling planet there was nothing quite so fine ; 
Of course you know the Class we mean, — the Class of Sev- 
enty-Nine. 

They had some merit; we'd not impair it; 
But now thev found a finer class begun. 
Thev were not in it, not for a minute. 
Not in it with the Class of Eighty-One. 

3 
There was another outfit, our hereditary foes, 
The warlike Class of Eighty, of a sophomoric pose. 
They undertook to rule us and direct what we should do ; 
They put up proclamations, and they hazed us, one or two. 
We hazed the hazers, with glue and razors ; 

In cane-spree and in rush we took the bun ; 
They were not in it, not for a minute. 
Not in it with the Class of Eighty-One. 

4 
And four years later, when we left, in Eighteen-Eighty-One, 
'Twas Jimmie said we were the finest class beneath thesun; 
That as for Eighty-Two and Eighty-Three and Eighty-Four, 
They were but imitations, painted shadows on the floor. 
Within the knowledge of all the college. 

No Class had done the things that we had done. 
The\' were not in it, not for a minute. 
Not in it with the Class of Eighty-One. 
19 



AFTER TWENTY-FIVE YEARS 

5 

And now as we come back again, when many years are 

past, 
We find that good old Eighty-One has never been outclassed. 
The later classes come and go, they have their little fling; 
But none are really corkers, like the Class of which we sing. 

They're often able, — quite creditable ; 

They live their day and have their little fun; 
But they're not in it, not for a minute, 

Not in it with the Class of Eighty-One. 

The Class gave three cheers for Dix, the song, and 
Itself, and after some further singing and fraterniz- 
ing, the assemblage broke up and the Reunion Din- 
ner was over. A march in force around the Little 
Triangle followed, and then a number of the men 
went over to have a look in at the Soph. Reception, in 
the big new Gym, where, among other attractions, 
we were introduced to one of Phil Jackson's married 
daughters. Cauldwell's and McAlpin's daughters 
were among those dancing. After which, an adjourn- 
ment was made to Headquarters, where the lower 
lights can be vouched for as burning at least as late 
as 3 A.M. 

This ended the formal Class events of the re- 
union ; but a good many of the fellows were still in 
town, the following day, to call in a group on 
Mrs. McCosh, who is still living in Princeton at 
the age of ninety; and to form in line with other 

20 



THE '81 CLASS REUNION 

classes in front of Old North for the procession to 
the Alumni Luncheon in the Gymnasium, and hear 
Davy Wills make a great speech in responding 
for the Class on that occasion. There were also 
some remaining to attend President Wilson's recep- 
tion at Prospect on the same afternoon; and to en- 
joy the promenade concert on the campus in the 
evening, where the band played, and the Seniors sang 
for the last time but one on the steps, and whence, 
at half-past nine, all flocked around to the cannon, 
to see one of the mightiest bonfires ever kindled in 
Princeton, signaling the college joy over the glorious 
baseball victory of Saturday. Streamed the flames 
high and higher into the darkness of the sky, light- 
ing up the faces of the thousands clustered about, 
and illuminating the sentinel elms, and West, and 
the new Library where East used to stand, and the 
two gleaming marble Halls, and the dear, familiar 
tower of Old Nassau itself, whose bell was clanging 
away in a mad outburst of joyous hilarity. So let 
us leave the scene, emblematic, as we all hope and 
believe, of many future victories, along all lines, for 
Princeton, — as well as of many future and equally 
happy reunions for Princeton's loyal Class of 1881. 



21 



CLASS NEWS 



CLASS NEWS 

JAMES L. COYLE 

Coyle is still connected with the Prudential Insur- 
ance Company, being Superintendent of the branch 
office at 126 West .34th Street, New York. He has 
changed his residence from Roseville to Glen Ridge, 

N. J. 

" Sorry I could not be present at the reunion," 
says a note from him ; " circumstances were such 
that I could not possibly get there this time." 

CHARLES E. CRAVEN 

Charlie is to bring out in November a History of 
Mattituck, the Long Island town where he is pastor 
of the Presbyterian Church. The book tells the 
storv of the village from the original allotment of 
the land in 1661 to the present time, and is to be 
fully illustrated. It will sell for I1.50 in cloth and 
$2.50 in half morocco. In view of the growing in- 
terest and importance in this country of matters an- 
cestral and genealogical, a volume of this kind has a 
real and permanent value, and it would be an inval- 
uable gain to American history if pastors in others 



AFTER TWENTY-FIVE YEARS 

of the country's countless small but historic towns 
and hamlets would have the interest and enterprise 
to follow Craven's example. 

EDWIN A. DIX 

The Secretary, while abroad, has been at work upon 
a new book, " Prophet's Landing," another novel of 
New England life, which will probably be published 
in the fall. He has also written several magazine 
articles, stories, etc. 

He expects to be in New York City throughout 
next winter. His address remains always simply 
East Orange, N. J. 

WILLIAM S. DODD 

Billy intends to remain in this country for a year, 
that being his leave of absence. His wife and fam- 
ily are with him. His address is 57 Montague 
Place, Montclair, N. J. 

CHARLES R. GILL, JR. 

Gill is reported to be no longer connected with 
the Presbyterian Hospital at San Juan, Porto Rico, 
where he has been Medical Missionary for the past 
two years. He is still on the island, and at last ac- 
counts his plans were uncertain. 

26 



CLASS NEWS 

JACOB ROSS GROVE 

Grove, who has been awav from York, Pa , for a 
considerable period, has now returned to live in that 
city. 

S. GRAEME HARRISON 

Harrison with his wife spent the past winter in 
Mexico. His home is still in Nottingham, Eng- 
land, and he is frequently to be seen at the St. 
James Club in London. 

ZACHARIAH KEPNER LOUCKS 

A telegram received by the Princeton Faculty re- 
cords the death of Loucks, on June i6th, in Phila- 
delphia. The tuneral was on June 20th, at the fam- 
ily residence at Loucks Mills, York, Pa. 

The Class will regret sincerely to learn of this pass- 
ing away of one of their number, even though it has 
seen so little of him since graduation. Loucks was 
a lawyer practising in Philadelphia, and was also a 
member of the firm of Z. K. & H. J. Loucks's 
Sons, of York, manufacturers of high-grade flours 
and dealers in grain. He was further interested in 
several other business and real-estate enterprises. 
He was unmarried. He died of typhoid fever. 

So far as the Secretary knows, this is but the third 
death to occur in the Class since the Twentieth-Year 



AFTER TWENTY-FIVE YEARS 

Reunion, five years ago ; the others being those of 
Robert Creighton Bradish, who died in New York 
on June 21, 1901, and of Frank Loney, who died 
in Atlantic City, N. J., on April 27, 1903. 

EDWARD F. AND HARRY K. 
MATTHEWS 

The Secretary has lately succeeded in obtaining 
some long lacking and important information about 
Ed and Harry, through the kindness of Mr. Mor- 
timer Matthews, of Cincinnati. 

On leaving college, in February, 1878, Edward 
returned to Cincinnati, and studied law in the office 
of his uncle, Stanley Matthews, attending at the 
same time the Cincinnati Law School. Whether he 
entered the bar or not is not certain ; at any rate, he 
never practised law. I. H. Hess, of '78, was study- 
ing law in the same office at that time and the two 
young men had rooms together and were chums 
during that portion of their student life. In De- 
cember, 1884, Ed went to Florida for the purpose 
of investing in an orange grove. While on the 
water, one day, his boat capsized, and he wore his 
wet clothes for the remainder of the day. This 
resulted in a severe cold, which developed into ery- 
sipelas, of which he died on January 9, 1885, at 
Rockledge, Fla., at the age of 27 years. He died 
in the hotel at that place utterly alone. His mother 

28 



*Tl o 2 D. 



^ n CO/TJfJ C/5 



■9 -.^ ^ W 




^r 'l&^^f -J''"^ 



t^^M^'"^ 




CLASS NEWS 

and brother were notified oi his iUness, but did not 
arrive until after he was dead and buried. Thev 
removed his remains to Spring Grove Cemeterv near 
Cincinnati. 

"As you know," writes Mr. Mortimer Matthews, 
" he was a voung man of considerable talents and 
charming social qualities. While not of a ruga;ed 
constitution, as evidenced to some extent by the 
manner of his death, he was a very athletic tellow. 
His appearance in this respect, however, was decep- 
tive ; he had rather a delicate look. I remember 
an episode which took place while he was studving 
law at Cincinnati which illustrates what I have just 
said. He was driving in a bugs;v with a friend on 
Spring Grove Avenue in the suburbs ot Cincinnati, 
when he and his friend were annoyed bv a couple ot 
young " toughs " driving in another vehicle. The 
latter took umbrage at perhaps his aristocratic ap- 
pearance, and while passing and repassing grew more 
and more insulting. Kd finally could not stand it 
anv longer, and alighted trom his buggv and asked 
them to step out and receive their punishment. 
Thev were delighted at the opportunitv, but were 
considerably surprised when Ed gave them both a 
sound thrashing. Perhaps some of his classmates 
may imagine the scene and be amused." 

Harry Matthews had a verv different career, 
though brief and brilliant. For perhaps a year or 

29 



AFTER TWENTY-FIVE YEARS 

two after leaving college he resided in Cincinnati, 
but soon went to Chicago and began speculating in 
wheat. He was very brilliant and successful at this, 
due in large measure to his really phenomenal math- 
ematical ability, which perhaps some of his class- 
mates will remember. The game was fascinating to 
him. Within two or three years he acquired a fort- 
une of almost half a million dollars. At this period 
he was known in the newspapers as the " plunger." 
The life was so alluring and exciting, however, that 
he could not quit ; and in the end he lost everything 
in the crash which ruined K. L. Harper and a num- 
ber of other Cincinnati men who had attempted to 
corner wheat. 

Harry afterwards regained a portion of his fort- 
une, but became broken in health, owing to the im- 
mense nervous strain to which he was subjected. 
He gave up his business in Chicago, and traveled 
in search of health. He finally settled in Galveston, 
Texas, and was engaged in selling wheat on com- 
mission. His health, however, had been under- 
mined, and he died there, on December 27, 1891, 
at the age of 30 years. 

Neither Ed nor Harry Matthews ever married. 

J. LEVERKTT MOORE 

Levie expects to sail for Europe in July, with his 
wife and his older daughter Nancy, to be away twelve 

30 



CLASS NEWS 

months. He has been accorded a year's leave of 
absence from his chair of Latin at Vassar College, 
but he does not promise that it shall be a " Sabbat- 
ical year," unless perhaps the Sabbaths be of the 
Continental variety. He will visit England and 
Northern Europe, but plans to spend the greater 
part of his time in Rome. 



HENRY CHARLES PORTER 

Dr. Porter, otherwise Polly, is in charge of an in- 
teresting enterprise, which has just successfully com- 
pleted its first year, — the Farm School, " a school 
in the country tor backward or difficult boys, who 
have not developed mentally to the same degree 
as other boys." Individual training and attention 
is closely given to each pupil. The school is in 
the rural free deliverv district of Media, Pa., about 
two miles from Wallingford station on the Penn- 
sylvania R. R. 

Porter's work is not such as '8i can avail itselt 
of, for there are of course no backward or difficult 
sons in the Class ; but it is needed work, and know- 
ing Porter, the Class can know that it is good 
work. 

" I had hoped to get up to the reunion," he ob- 
serves in a note ; " but I could not, just at that time, 
get ofl^." 

31 



AFTER TWENTY-FIVE YEARS 



FRANK M. ROSEBERRY 

Frank is still to be found in Le Mars, " the best 
town of its size in the State of Iowa," where he 
practises law as a member of the firm of Zink & 
Roseberry. He is doing well, and for recreation 
interests himself in politics. " Not, however, as an 
office-seeker," he declares, " for that is one of the 
evils I eschew. I am a progressive Republican. 
Being in New Jersey, you are not familiar with the 
term or its meaning. It signifies no grafting, no 
stand-patting, revision of the tariff, and an increas- 
ing income-tax according to the greatness of the fort- 
une. Put the trusts out of business, and use a curb 
bit on the corporations." 

Roseberry is a delegate to the State Convention, 
and also to the Judicial Convention. He visited 
Princeton last August, for the first time since 1883, 
and is enthusiastic over its growth and improvements. 
His only son, Clarence Depue Roseberry, who is 
now nineteen (he has two daughters besides), is now 
in Cornell College, Iowa. 



FRANK R. SYMMES 

Symmes, who is still pastor of the Presbyterian 
Church of Tennent, N. J., in the region made historic 
by the Battle of Monmouth, has been doing exactly 



CLASS NEWS 

the same work tor Tennent and its vicinity that Craven 
has been doing for Mattituck, Long Island. His 
" History of Old Tennent Church," first published 
in 1897, and revised and enlarged last vear, is much 
more than a simple account of the church itself, of 
which Symmes is the fifteenth pastor. The book 
gives valuable and hitherto unpublished data con- 
cerning numerous early families of the town and 
countv ; ancestral tables and references; marriage, 
birth, baptismal and mortuary records ; old traditions, 
and a new narrative of the great battle ; and it con- 
tains over fifty maps and illustrations, — making a 
500-page, five-dollar volume of present and future 
interest alike to the historian and the genealogist. 
Work ot this kind is ot solid and substantial impor- 
tance, and means long and painstaking labor and 
often no inconsiderable private expense. Such ad- 
ditions to the Class Library deserve warmly appre- 
ciative mention. 



HENRY C. THOM 

The items alluded to as sent in by Thom are printed 
below. Thom, who made a Southern trip last win- 
ter, has this spring been making an extensive West- 
ern one, in which, in nineteen days, without traveling 
Sundays, he made thirteen stops and traveled 6,600 
miles. In the course ot the trip he went from San 
Diego to Seattle, the length of the Pacific Coast 

33 



AFTER TWENTY-FIVE YEARS 

States, and found himself in Oakland the day after 
the earthquake. He did not cross to San Francisco, 
as no one was permitted to do so. " By day," he 
says, "you could see nothing of San Francisco; 
smoke cut off the entire city. By night you could 
see it all, and those who saw will never forget. If 
I could, I'd try to tell a little of it, but there aren't 
any words tor it." 

Thom has been doing a real service, not merely 
to the Secretary but to the Class, in collecting items 
of news about '8i men from time to time and send- 
ing them on. The Secretary has already thanked 
him by letter, and takes this opportunity of thank- 
ing him again and publicly. If other men will form 
the same habit, of sending in all the '8i items that 
come their way, whether important or unimportant, 
and whether about themselves or others of the Class, 
the whole Class will reap the reward in having fre- 
quent and interesting Bulletins to read and keep. 

Thom writes : 

Miles City, April 26, 1906. 
My dear Dix : 

I saw Dominie Gosman last evening at Butte. He is 
now employed at one of the mines upon the hill and has 
rooms in the Clark Building, but expects to go to house- 
keeping again this spring. He is about as his picture in 
the Record shows him, but has lost some more hair from 
the top of his head. He seems prosperous and content, and, 
as usual in the mining country, stands to do well this year. 

34 



CLASS NEWS 

I noticed that everybody that came into the hotel seemed 
to know him and have a glad word for him, — about half 
calling him Charlie. 

I enjoyed seeing him very much, and found that, like the 
other outliers who can't o;et back and seldom see an '8i 
man, his interest was as keen as ever. . . . 

April 28. 

I saw Walsh in St. Paul vesterdav afternoon. He has 
cut off the luxuriant beard that adorns his picture in the 
Record^ . . . and his short-trimmed mustache is iron-gray. 
I think that he must have rung in an old photo, on the confid- 
ing editors. But aside from gravness he isn't much changed, 
and he still has the same smile and cheery way. He is 
Cashier of the Northwestern Fuel Co. in St. Paul. 

He saw Vanderburgh and McCune at an Alumni Din- 
ner about three weeks ago, and reports both well. He un- 
derstands that Van is running for Congress; is in no business 
except looking after his propertv. McCune is running for 
Probate Judge in Minneapolis. 

Walsh says that Allen is now District Judge, — " the 
next thing to the Governor in North Dakota." 

May 19. 
My clerk waked me up from a mass of inspection notes 
that I was trying to put in shape yesterday, saying that some 
one wanted to see me. I went over to the railing, and 
found a short man, wearing eyeglasses and a short-clipped 
mustache, besides the usual articles of clothing necessary to 
prevent arrest and to " put up a front " as a business man. 
He smiled and put out his hand. I had to acknowledge 

35 



AFTER TWENTY-FIVE YEARS 

that while I knew his face was familiar, I couldn't place 
him. 

" You wouldn't guess in a thousand years. Princeton, 
'8i." 

" Bonner Skinner, come in ! " 

Except that his hair and mustache are iron-gray, he hasn't 
changed much. Meeting him anywhere that you expected 
to see an '8 1 man or even a known Princeton man, he 'd 
be recognized. 

He is now General Agent for the American Fire Extin- 
guisher, manufactured by the Eagle Tool Co. of Cincinnati, 
and has his office at 269 Dearborn Street, this city (Chicago). 
He still lives on Cass Street, on the North Side. . . . Skin- 
ner savs that he made and lost about $500,000, and has to 
work now. I think that he has a pretty good thing now, and 
should do well. He is interested with others of his family 
in a copper mine, for which they have just refused to give a 
year's option at $3,000,000. It is rich, but will not be on 
a railroad for twelve or eighteen months. He expects his 
share to net him a comfortable amount. 

He belongs to the can't-get-away club this summer, and 
will not be at the reunion. . . . 

Sincerely yours, 

[Signed] H. C. Thom. 

GEORGE G. TOWNSEND 

Townsend, who lives in Frostburg, Md., nearly 
on top of the Alleghanies, has sidestepped from 
railway and mining enterprises, and is now absorbed 
in highway engineering, being engaged in exten- 

36 



CLASS NEWS 

sive and important county roadvvork. " We have 
a naturally beautiful country," he writes, " and it we 
can get our roads into proper shape, it will be a de- 




" HERE'S LOOKING AT YOU." 
George Tovvnsend using the Patent Pendulum Hand Level invented by him. 

lightful automobile country, as our mountain scenery 
is unsurpassed and our summer climate is perfect. 



AFTER TWENTY-FIVE YEARS 

" I was very sorry indeed not to have gotten to 
the reunion," he adds ; " but this is our busy time 
on the roads, and it was impossible for me to get 
off. . . . Give my kindest regards to any of the fel- 
lows you see. I am always glad to hear from any 
of the boys." 

GEORGE L. VAN ALEN 

The Rev. George, who has latterly been living in 
Haddonfield, N. J., has accepted a call to the Cham- 
bers Memorial Presbyterian Church in Rutledge, 
Pa. He was installed on July i. 

WILLIAM T. VLYMEN 

Vlymen, who is still Principal of the Eastern Dis- 
trict High School of Brooklyn, has two sons grad- 
uating from Georgetown University at Washington, 
(June, 1906,) — the two eldest, Henry and William ; 
and his oldest daughter, Josephine, who is now 
twenty-two, is graduating from Trinity, where his 
second daughter is finishing her sophomore year. 

Vlymen is as yet far from well. He came down 
for the reunion, but was forced to return on Mon- 
day. He is still suffering from phlebitis, the effect 
of the operation for appendicitis which kept him in 
hospital and afterwards at Lakewood for a good part 
of last spring. 



CLASS NEWS 

He has improved his enforced leisure by working 
on another educational book. His Columbus Read- 
ers and his edition of the " Idylls of the King" for 
schools have proved very successful. 

LOST, STRAYED OR STOLEN 

Liformation is asked from any members of the 
Class concerning the address or whereabouts of Ar- 
cher, Breckinridge, Boyer, Ingham, hem^, McNutt, 
Nyce and Olds. 



JOHN L. PHILLIPS 

Is now on the Isthmus of Panama, in the Canal 
Zone. He is army surgeon in the Ancon Hospital 
there, under the Isthmian Canal Commission. 
Harry Pavne is also at Ancon, in the Chief Sani- 
tary Office. 

CHARLES GRANT TITSWORTH 

Charlie, who holds the responsible post of Title 
Officer of the Fidelity Trust Co., in Newark, is the 
originator of a most important and public-spirited 
movement in that city — that of the preserving and 
planting of trees in the streets and parks. Through 
his effiDrts a commission was appointed for that pur- 

39 



AFTER TWENTY-FIVE YEARS 

pose two years ago, and he is now president of the 
commission, its members serving without pay. In 
the brief time of its existence, this board has planted 
over twenty-five hundred new trees in the streets of 
Newark, besides doing assiduous work in preserving 
the fine old trees already standing, destroying their 
insect enemies, and the like. The commission has 
lately also been given charge of the city parks. A 
part of their work which is pretty wide-reaching is 
correspondence with other municipalities that have 
heard of the results they have attained and are 
spurred to follow the example. Titsworth's scheme, 
which is of course wholly disinterested, is along broad 
lines and is going to do much in adorning the city, 
as well as in setting a pace for other communities to 
follow. 

JAMES A. WEBB, Jr. 

Mr. and Mrs. James A. Webb, Gus's father and 
mother, and Mrs. James A. Webb, Jr., his widow, 
were among those in Princeton during Commence- 
ment and were included in the circle of the Class's 
fellowship, as are always the families of our departed 
comrades. They attended Henry Dufiield's tea, 
where they met the members of the Class and their 
wives ; and Mr. Webb paid a visit to Headquarters, 
where he was welcomed with affection and respect 
by all the men present. Mrs. Gus Webb subse- 
quently writes, in a note from which the Secretary 

40 



CLASS NEWS 

takes the liberty of quoting : "Among the very 
pleasantest memories that I hold are those of Com- 
mencement week at Princeton, this June, and none 
of those memories touch mv heart quite so closely 
as the meeting with the many members of '8i, 
whom Gus loved so dearly, and who gave so cordial 
a welcome to Mr. and Mrs. Webb and to me. We 
truly appreciate the many courtesies shown us, and 
often refer to our delightful days with the splendid 
men of '8 i." 



41 



CLASS MISCELLANIES 



CLASS ORGANIZATION 



President : 

Charles Allen Munn, 
361 Broadway, New York City 



Vice-President : 

Henry G. Duffield, 

Princeton, N. J. 

Secretary : 

Edwin A. Dix, 
East Orange, N. J. 



T 



reasLirer : 



Alexander M. Hudnut, 
5 Nassau St., New York City, 



45 



AFTER TWENTY-FIVE YEARS 

Reunion Committee : 

Charles Allen Munn, 

Henry G. Duffield, 

Edwin A. Dix, 

Alexander M. Hudnut, 

John O. H. Pitney, 

Arthur H. Scribner, 

Paul van Dyke. 



Committee on Resolutions 
In Memory of Deceased Members of the Class 

James L. Coyle, 

John O. H. Pitney, 

Paul van Dyke. 



Class Colors : 

Cardinal Red and Navy Blue, 
As in Marker and Cover of this Book. 



46 



MARRIAGES AND CHILDREN 

In Addition to^ or Since^ those Reported in the Class 
Record of igoi 



Edward Rhine I 

Emma Florence Patton I 

CHILDREN 

Elinor Florence Rhine, 
Arthur Edward Rhine, 
Percival Robert Rhine, 
Marie Louise Rhine,* 

* Died February 20, i 



June 6, 1885, 

AT 

Philadelphia, Pa. 

born March 29, 1886 

" Jan. 16, 1888 

" July I, 1891 

" Feb. II, 1894 



Addison S. Rodgers 

TO 

Anna Trigg Payne Hargis 



June 27, 1901, 

AT 

Louisville, Ky. 



Pliny Fisk 

T(l 

Eleanor Hepburn Small 



July 8, 1903, 

AT 

Edinburgh, Scotland 



James Spencer Voorhees 

■l~o 

Elizabeth Warner 



September 14, 1905, 

AT 

Salisbury, Conn. 



William B. Myer.s 

TO 

Virginia Chapman 

Elise Myers, 
Mildred Myers, 
Sarah .^un Myers, 



(Ull.DKKN 



October 1 7, 
1882. 

born ,Tuly '21, 1S83 
•' Auk. ;ln. 1«84 
" Auk. I'-*. lH8r. 



BIRTHS 

Since June, igoi 



To Francis G. Landon 

AND 

Mary H. T. Landon 
Eleanor Landon born July 28, 1901 

To J. Leverett Moore 

AND 

Nancy C. W. Moore 

Fidelia Leverett Moore, . . . born August 7, 1901 
To Charles Grant Titsworth 

AND 

Elizabeth L. D. Titsworth 
Charlotte Grant Titsworth, . born September 7, 1902 
Mary Linen Titsworth,* . " " '• .. 

* Died April 11, 1904. 

To Henry S. Scribner 

AND 

Mary L. M. Scribner 

Annie Lee Scribner, . . . born October 28, 1903 

To William T. Vlymen 

A N D 

Fehcita R. Vlymen 

Edward Leo Vlymen, . . born November 6, 1903 

(Edward Vlymen, born February 16, iqoo, died October 10, 1902) 

48 



BIRTHS 

To Henry G. Duffield 

AND 

Florence L. M. Duffield 
Daniel Morrell Duffield, . . born November 24, 1903 

To Charles R. Gill 

A N n 

Clara D. G. (iill 

A son, born November, 1903 

To Joseph D. Hubbard 

AND 

Janet W. Hubbard 

Janet Hubbard, .... born October 16, 1904 

To Addison S. Rodgers 

AND 

Anna T. P. H. Rodgers 
Jane Campbell I'ayne Rodgers, . born July 12, K)05 



49 



DEATHS 

In Addition to, or Since, those Reported in the Class 
Record of igoi 

Edward F. Matthews, January 9, 1885 

At Rockledge, Fla. 

[Amplified from Class Record. ) 

Harry K. Matthews, December 27, lOQi 

At Galveston, Texas. 

Stanley K. Phraner, January 15, 1895 

At Singapore, S. S. 

Robert Creighton Bradish, June 21, 1901 

At New York City. 

Francis Loney, April 27, 1903 

At Atlantic City, N. J. 

Zachariah Kepner Loucks, June 16, 1906 

At Philadelphia, Pa. 

Total Known Deaths, 30. 



50 



DIRECTORY 

OF THE 

CLASS OF 1881 

REVISED TO JUNE, 1906 



DIRECTORY 



CLASS OF 1 88 I 



Judge Frank Powell Allen, 
Lisbon, North Dakota. 

James R. Archer, 

Try St. James Hotel, Washington, D. C. 
Or, Mt. Vernon, Va. 

Prof. A. Campbell Armstrong, Ph.D., 

Wesleyan College, Middletown, Conn. 

William S. Bacot, 

234 Genesee St., Utica, N. Y. 

Clifton Rodes Barret, 

Cherokee Park, Louisville, Kv. 

Benjamin B. BIydenburgh, 

78 Wall St., New York City. 

Washington L Bover, 
Try Mena, Ark. 

Jacob S. Brandt, D.D.S., 
Susquehanna, Pa. 

53 



AFTER TWENTY-FIVE YEARS 

Henry L. Brant, 

27 William St., New York City. 
Res., 91 Macon St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 

David C. Breckinridge, 

Try Chicago Beach Hotel, Chicago, 111. 

Stuart Brown, 

309 South 6th St., Springfield, 111. 
Res., 717 S. 4th St., 

Charles Henry Butler, 

1535 I St., N. W., Washington, D. C. 

Thomas W. Cauldwell, 

24 Broad St., New York City. 
Res., 4.2 Elm St., Morristown, N. J. 

Lewis L. Cory, 
Fresno, Cal. 

William A. Coursen, 

U. S. Custom-House, New York City. 
Res., Morristown, N. J. 

John F. Cowan, 

Owsley Block, Butte City, Mont. 

Res., 903 Second St., Salt Lake City, Utah. 

James L. Coyle, 

Prud. Ins. Co., 126 W. 34th St., N. Y. City. 
Res., Glen Ridge, N. J. 

Rev. Charles E. Craven, 

Mattituck, Long Island, N. Y. 

54 



DIRFXTORY 

Robert Cressvvell, Jr., 

326 S. 1 6th St., Philadelphia, Pa. 

Rev. Wilham A. Darden, 
Petal u ma, Cal. 

Frederic M. Davis, 

132 Nassau St., New York City. 

Res., 147 Orchard St., Bloomfield, N. J. 

William C. Davis, 

120 Broadway, New York City. 
Res., 36 W. 35th St., " 

Edwin A. Dix, 

177 Harrison St., East Orange, N. J. 

Rev. William S. Dodd, M.D., 

Until June, 1907, 57 Montague Place, Mont- 

clair, N. J. 
Talas, Cesarea, Turkey in Asia. 

William A. Dougall, 

213 S. 6th St., Newark, N. J. 

Arthur C. Doughertv, M.D., 

158 Washington St., Newark, N. J. 

Henry G. Duffield, 
Princeton, N. J. 

Rev. Charles E. Dunn, 

I 53 I Tioga St., Philadelphia, Pa. 

55 



AFTER TWENTY-FIVE YEARS 

Rev. Edwin M. Ellis, 

1016 Billings Ave., Helena, Mont. 

T. H. Powers Farr, 

49 Wall St., New York City. 
Res., West Orange, N. J. 

Pliny Fisk, 

62 Cedar Street, New York City. 
Res., 13 E. 45th St. " 

Warren J. Flick, 

Wilkes Barre, Pa. 

Willis Fowler, 

42 Wall St., New York City. 

Rev. George C. Frost, 

829 South Ave., Rochester, N. Y. 

Charles R. Gill, Jr., M.D., 

Try Presb. Hospital, San Juan, Porto Rico. 
Or, Care J. M. French, 44 Pine St., N. Y. City. 

Frank Gledhill, 

First Nat'l Bank Bldg., Paterson, N. J. 
Res., 429 Park Ave., " " 

Charles N. Gosman, 

Clark Building, Butte, Mont. 

Jacob Ross Grove, 
York, Pa. 

56 



DIRECTORY 

Alfred Guillou, 

Hucneme, Ventura Co., Cal. 

Or, 1 50 South Los Robles, Pasadena, Cal. 

Rev. Robert Haddow, 

Office of The Westminster, Toronto, Canada. 

Edward P. T. Hammond, 

Care Dr. Thomas V. Hammond, 17 13 H St., 

N. W., Washington, D. C. 
Or, 30a Crookham Mansions, Munster Park, 
S. W., London, Kng. 

Rev. Richard D. Harlan, D.D., 

Lake Forest College, Lake Forest, 111. 

S. Graeme Harrison, 

Easthorpe House, Ruddington, Nottingham, 
Eng. 

Rev. James S. Hillhouse, 
Vicksburg, Miss. 

Joseph D. Hubbard, 

Western Mines Development Co., 616 Rail- 
way Exchange Bldg., Chicago, 111. 
Res., 57 Cedar St., Chicago, 111. 

Alexander M. Hudnut, 

5 Nassau Street, New York City. 
Res., 51 W. 39th St., " 

Robert H. Hutchins, M.D. 

North Mill St., Newcastle, Pa. 

57 



AFTER TWENTY-FIVE YEARS 

William Ingham, 

Try Cor. Pine and i6th Sts., Philadelphia, Pa. 

Philip N. Jackson, 

Res., 15 Waverly PL, Newark, N. J. 

Prof. Arthur L. Kimball, Ph.D., 

Amherst College, Amherst, Mass. 

John Linton Kirk, 

120 Broadway, New York City. 

Res., Ill Gilford Ave., Jersey City, N. J. 

Edward R. Knowles, 

Box 35, Putnam, Conn. 

Francis G. Landon, 

U. S. Embassy, Vienna, Austria. 

Louis J. Lang, 

N. Y. Press Club, 1 14 Nassau St., N. Y. City. 

Charles E. Manierre, 

31 Nassau St., New York City. 

Res., 352 West End Ave., New York City. 

Judge Henry McAlpin, 

Southern Express Co. Bldg., Savannah, Ga. 
Res., 230 Barnard St., " " 

Walter I. McCoy, 

43 Wall St., New York City. 
Res., South Orange, N. J. 

58 



DIRECTORY 

Alexander McCune, 

403 N. Y. Life Bldg., Minneapolis, Minn. 
Res., 613 K. 26th St., 

William S. McMurdy, M.D., 

253 West 70th St., New York City. 

Rev. George L. McNutt, 
Address Unknown. 

Gilbert W. Minor, 

206 Broadway, New York City, 
Res., 892 Park PL, Brooklyn, N. Y. 

Robert Grier Monroe, 

15 Wall St., New York City 

Res., 534 5th Ave., New York City. 

William J. Montgomery, 

420 Soydras St., New Orleans, La. 

Prof. J. Leverett Moore, Ph.D., 

Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, N. Y. 
Res., 117 Academy St., " " 

Charles Allen Munn, 

361 Broadway, New York City. 
Res., 14 E. 22d St., " 

Samuel H. Myers, 

Montgomery Bldg., Augusta, Ga 
Res., Summerville, Ga. 

W. B. Myers, 

Bethlehem, Pa. 

59 



AFTER TWENTY-FIVE YEARS 

Frank J. Nyce, 

Try Cambridge, O. 

Julian G. Olds, 

Address Unknown. 

Rev. Francis J. Orr, 

122 Pearl St., Buffalo, N. Y. 

Res., 758 Prospect Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. 

Henry M. Payne, 

Chief Sanitary Office, Ancon, Canal Zone, 

Panama. 
Or Res., 2023 Mass. Ave., Washington, D. C. 

Major John L. Phillips, M.D., 

Care Surgeon-General, U. S. Army, Wash- 
ington, D. C. 

John O. H. Pitney, 

765 Broad St., Newark, N. J. 

Res., 123 Madison Ave., Morristown, N. J. 

Henry Charles Porter, Ph.D., 

Rural Free Delivery 3, Media, Pa. 

Walter W. Preston, 
Bel Air, Md. 

Alexander T. Reid, 

5 Nassau Street, New York City. 
Res., 28 E. nth St.," 
60 



DIRECTORY 

Edward Rhine, 

6 1 E. 9th St., New York City. 
Res., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. 

Louis D. Ricketts, D.Sc, 

Care Phelps, Dodge & Co., 99 John St., New 
York Citv. Also Bisbee or Globe, Ariz. 

Carroll Robbins, 

28-30 Eorst-Richey Bldg., Trenton, N. J. 
Res., 263 Hamilton Ave., " " 

Edward G. Roberts, 

261^ N. High St., Columbus O. 
Res., 415 E. Broad St., " 

William H. Roberts, 
Danville, Kv. 

Walter E. Robinson, M.D., 

Care Princeton Club, New York City. 

Prof. William A. Robinson, 
Lawrenceville, N. J. 

Addison S. Rodgers, 

Springfield Gas Engine Co., Springfield, (). 

Frank M. Roseberrv, 
Le Mars, Iowa. 

George S. Schmidt, 
York, Pa. 

Theodore B. Schneideman, M.D., 

I 83 I Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. 
61 



AFTER TWENTY-FIVE YEARS 

Arthur H. Scribner, 

155 Fifth Avenue, New York City. 
Res., 39 E. 67th St., " 

Prof. Henry Say re Scribner, 

Western Univ. of Pa., Allegheny, Pa. 
Res., Ben Avon, Pa. 

Henry C. Selheimer, 

Steiner Building, Birmingham, Ala. 
Res., 1430 7th Ave., " " 

John Irwin Shaw, 

5507 Stanton Ave., Pittsburg, Pa. 

George M. Sinclair, 

710 Provident Bldg., 4th and Chestnut Sts., 

Philadelphia, Pa. 
Res., 1527 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa. 

John Bonner Skinner, 

269 Dearborn St., Chicago, 111. 
Res., 159 Cass St., " " 

Edward H. Small, M.D., 

Penn and Negley Aves., Pittsburg, Pa. 

Lewis H. Stanton, 

626 Gravier St., New Orleans, La. 

Res., 3923 Carondelet St., New Orleans, La. 

James B. Stokes, 

The Racquet Club, 27 W.43d St., N. Y. City. 
62 



DIRECTORY 

Rev. Frank R. Symmes, 
lennent, N. J. 

Henry C. Thorn, 

Care Swift & Co., Stock Yards Station, Chica- 

go, 111. 
Res., 5108 S. Park Ave., Chicago, 111. 

Charles Grant Titsworth, 

765 Broad Street, Newark, N. J. 
Res., 18 Camp St., " 

George G. Townsend, 

Box 275, Frostburg, Md. 

Rev. George L. Van Alen, 
Rutledge, Pa. 

William H. Vanderburgh, 

923 S. 7th St., Minneapolis, Minn, 

Rev. Paul van Dyke, D.D., 

Princeton, N. J. 

William T. Vlymen, Ph.D., 

K. D. High School, Driggs Ave. and S. 3d St., 

Brooklyn, N. Y. 
Res., Hempstead, Long Island, N. Y. 

Rev. James Spencer Voorhees, 
Adams, Mass. 

6; 



AFTER TWENTY-FIVE YEARS 

Henry B. Walsh, 

Northwestern Fuel Co., 712 Pioneer Press 

Bldg., St. Paul, Minn. 
Res., 892 Goodrich Ave., St. Paul, Minn. 

Henry D. Warren, 

45 Yonge St., Toronto, Canada. 

Res., 95 Wellesley St., Toronto, Canada. 

Thomas D. Warren, 
Mohawk, N. Y. 

Pennington Whitehead, 

50 Wall Street, New York City. 
Res., 51 E. 78th St.," 

Robert Williams, 

First National Bank Bldg., Paterson, N. J. 
Res., 21 Church St., 

Rev. David Wills, Jr., 

Grace Church, Oswego, N. Y. 

Rev. James M. Wilson, D.D., 

Cor. Columbia St. and Broadway, Seattle, Wash. 



64 



STANDING ADDRESS 

OF THE 

CLASS SECRETARY 

EDWIN A. DIX 
EAST ORANGE, NEW JERSEY 



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LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 

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